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An appeals court has ruled that Thomas Mink, shown working in 2004, may pursue his lawsuit against a prosecutor who approved a search warrant for his home.
An appeals court has ruled that Thomas Mink, shown working in 2004, may pursue his lawsuit against a prosecutor who approved a search warrant for his home.
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A former college student who had been accused of libeling a professor in an online journal can pursue his lawsuit against the prosecutor who approved a search warrant affidavit for his home, a federal appeals court said Monday.

The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling reversing a lower court’s dismissal of the lawsuit against Weld County prosecutor Susan Knox.

The lower court said Knox couldn’t be sued because of qualified immunity for government employees.

The appeals court disagreed, sending the case back to the trial court.

Former University of Northern Colorado student Thomas Mink sued Knox in 2004 after she approved a search warrant affidavit for his home following a complaint that he had libeled a professor in his online paper “The Howling Pig.” Greeley police seized a computer and written materials from the home. The Associated Press

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